The First and Second Declarations of Havana: Manifestos of Revolutionary Struggle in the Americas Adopted by the Cuban PeopleMary-Alice Waters Pathfinder, 2007 - 100 pages Nowhere are the questions of revolutionary strategy that today confront men and women on the front lines of struggles in the Americas addressed with greater truthfulness and clarity than in the First and Second Declarations of Havana, adopted bymillion-strong assemblies of the Cuban people in 1960 and 1962.These uncompromising indictments of imperialist plunder and?the exploitation of man by man??affirming the power of thegreat mass of toiling humanity that ?has begun to march??continue to stand as manifestos of revolutionary struggle byworking people the world over. |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-3 sur 12
Page 31
... Indians to " full human dignity " ; the right of women to civil , social , and political equality ; the right of the elderly to a secure old age ; the right of intellectuals , artists , and scien- tists to use their work to fight for a ...
... Indians to " full human dignity " ; the right of women to civil , social , and political equality ; the right of the elderly to a secure old age ; the right of intellectuals , artists , and scien- tists to use their work to fight for a ...
Page 60
... Indians form the backbone - like the Andes Mountains - of the entire American continent . For those who considered the Indian more a thing than a person , this mass of humanity does not count , did not count , and , they believed ...
... Indians form the backbone - like the Andes Mountains - of the entire American continent . For those who considered the Indian more a thing than a person , this mass of humanity does not count , did not count , and , they believed ...
Page 61
... Indians , who extend from the U.S. border to the edges of the Southern Hemisphere , and the 45 million mestizos , who for the most part differ little from the Indians ; all these natives , this formidable res- ervoir of labor , whose ...
... Indians , who extend from the U.S. border to the edges of the Southern Hemisphere , and the 45 million mestizos , who for the most part differ little from the Indians ; all these natives , this formidable res- ervoir of labor , whose ...
Table des matières
Preface by MaryAlice Waters | 9 |
Second Declaration of Havana | 34 |
R ན | 91 |
Droits d'auteur | |
Expressions et termes fréquents
aggression alliance Batista Blacks Bolivia brutal capital capitalist China colonial Communist condemns continent countries Cuba's revolutionary Cuban Revolution Cuban workers Declaration of Havana Declaration of San defend Dominican economic Ernesto Che Guevara expelled Cuba exploitation feudal Fidel Castro fight foreign ministers French GRANMA GRANMA ARCHIVES human imperialist independence Indians intellectuals Inter-American International intervention invaded Jack Barnes José Martí July 26 Movement labor land Latin America leaders Lenin lives March Marx Mary-Alice Waters masses mercenaries military million mobilize National General Assembly October oligarchies oppressed organized Party Pathfinder Books percent Playa Girón political popular prime minister Punta Punta del Este reactionary Rebel Army regime Republic revolutionary government revolutionists San José Second Declaration social solidarity sovereignty Soviet Union Spanish sugar thousand tion U.S. government U.S. South U.S. troops U.S.-backed underdeveloped United Washington women workers and farmers workers and peasants www.pathfinderpress.com Yankee monopolies